With the hunger strike by detainees at Guantanamo Bay entering its twelfth week, some 40 additional US Navy medical forces arrived over the weekend as the facility struggles to cope with force-feedings and ailing prisoners.

According to a Guantanamo spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Samuel
House, the team of dozens arrived at the prison facility over the
weekend, and include nurses and medical specialists.

As of Saturday, the official count on inmates involved in the
hunger strike is at 100 out of the total 166 population. Of that
number, 21 are being force fed through nasal tubes and five are
hospitalized, though military officials will not acknowledge
whether any are in life-threatening condition.

Lawyers for several of the detainees believe that the number of
hunger strikers at Guantanamo is actually 130, higher than
official estimates. Regardless, official numbers on Monday
indicate that an additional inmate had been placed on a feeding
tube since Saturday.

According to the Miami Herald, the US Navy medical reinforcements
arrived in conjunction with an inspection by Red Cross delegates
evaluating detainee conditions there.

A lawyer representing Fayiz al-Kandari, 35, claims that his
client has been tube-fed against his will for a week. The public
defender accused US military personnel of using an
“unnecessarily large feeding tube” on the Kuwaiti
detainee.

In response, House stated that there is no ‘standard’ size of
tube used in nasogastric feeding at Guantánamo.“Each detainee is
treated based on the recommendation of the doctor,” according to
the lieutenant colonel.

Five Red Cross delegates arrived at the prison on Friday for the
organization’s 93rd visit since the prison camps opened in 2002.
In a letter sent last week by Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) to
National Security Director Tom Donilon the Senator quoted the
International Committee of the Red Cross, who recently informed
her staff that the level of desperation among the detainees is
“unprecedented.”

Feinstein, chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, also
referenced a 2009 request made in part by her following the
attempted bombing of a Detroit-bound jetliner by a Yemeni branch
of Al-Qaeda, which successfully halted the transfers of 56 Yemeni
detainees pending stabilization in that country.

In light of Yemeni president Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s “strong”
resistance to Al-Qaeda, Feinstein writes that transfers to that
country should resume.

Dr. Terry Kupers, a psychiatrist and author, told RT that the US
would be better advised to keep the detainees alive by improving
the conditions they’re protesting, not by force-feeding, which he
deemed unethical.

“When one or two people go on a hunger strike it’s an extreme
act, they’re taking a risk of their life for a message they want
to deliver,” he said.

“When a hundred people go on a hunger strike, you’ve got a
major problem with the harsh conditions and the answer is to
settle with the prisoners to improve. Instead, the military is
playing an extremely dangerous game and letting them starve to
death. Why not just address their demands?” added Kupers.

On Thursday, the American Medical Association sent a letter to US
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, reiterating that organization’s
policy that force-feeding mentally competent adults who refuse
food is a violation of medical ethics.

That letter, sent directly by AMA president Dr. Jeremy Lazarus,
urged Hagel "to address any situation in which a physician
may be asked to violate the ethical standards of his or her
profession,” as quoted by Reuters.

Meanwhile, according to the AFP the former chief prosecutor at
Guantanamo Bay, Air Force colonel Morris Davis, warned that
"unless President Obama acts soon, I believe it is likely one
or more of the detainees will die."